Thursday, January 11, 2018

India’s $2.9 Billion Ballistic Missile Submarine Was Crippled After Someone Left A Hatch Open

Under repair: INS Arihant stationed at the naval warehouse in Visakhapatnam in 2014. Photo Credit: Reuters

The Hindu: INS Arihant left crippled after ‘accident’ 10 months ago

Nuclear submarine was damaged after water entered its propulsion chamber

Indigenous nuclear submarine INS Arihant has suffered major damage due to ''human error'' and has not sailed now for more than 10 months, say sources in the Navy.

Arihant is the most important platform within India’s nuclear triad covering land-air-sea modes.

Arihant’s propulsion compartment was damaged after water entered it, according to details available with The Hindu. A naval source said water rushed in as a hatch on the rear side was left open by mistake while it was at harbour.

The Ministry of Defence did not respond to questions from The Hindu.

Read more ....

WNU Editor: This is beyond unbelievable .... and we are only learning about it 10 months after the fact.

More News On India’s $3 Billion Ballistic Missile Submarine Almost Sinking After Someone Left A Hatch Open

India $2.9 Billion Nuclear Ballistic Missile Submarine Flooded And Almost Sank After Someone Left The Hatch Open -- Newsweek
Someone Left a Hatch Open and Crippled India’s $2.9 Billion Submarine -- Popular Mechanics
Indian nuclear submarine grounded after hatch left open -- Times Of Israel
A Foreign Navy Screwed Up Its New $3 Billion Nuclear Missile Sub By Leaving Its Hatch Open -- Task & Purpose
India's Nuclear Submarine INS Arihant Back in Service After Repairs -- Sputnik
India's Lone Arihant-class SSBN Has Been Out of Service for Months -- The Diplomat
INS Arihant Accident Raises Questions About the Sustainability of India's SSBN Force -- The Diplomat

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

I wonder what their procedure system is to allow that to happen

Turfy77 said...

Ive worked in India and it doesn't surprise me

Bob Huntley said...

At least the cock-up didn't involve a missile launch.

Anonymous said...

That thing costs $3bn? Must be an error. It looks as if it barely can float